With our most gracious and endearing apologies, we now present to you, in alphabetical order, the 22 Least Important Writers of 2013. Please enjoy, if possible.

All the Writers of Gawker.com

These self-styled web hooligans ride waves
of phantom traffic generated by hiccups in the Facebook servers, which
seem to be keenly tuned into the work of one viral savant who could kill
the whole enterprise with a sick day. They gleefully attack the
"establishment" media while feeding off its offerings, clueless to the
fact that the dying media companies enduring their potshots were the
only chance they ever had for a secure retirement or paying their kids'
college tuitions. (Not to mention the thrills they get when any of the
worthies they routinely mock return the jibes with a kind word, or any
attention at all.) They'll all be replaced when Nick Denton buys Thought
Catalog.

Less important than: The "Top Users" on the Buzzfeed Community Leaderboard

Daniel Barkeley

Daniel
Barkeley is the editor-in-chief of the world's worst website, the Daily
Currant, a "satire" publication whose stock-in-trade is unfunny bits of
political and cultural wish-fulfillment, the viral success—"viral"
meant as literally as possible—of which is a testament to how far a good lie will
travel if lacks traditional markers of satire like "humor" or "jokes."

Less important than: People who just lie on Facebook.

Dylan Byers

Dylan Byers, a staff typist at The Politico, has been called, by this very website, the "dumbest media-news reporter in the business," the "world's grossest reporter," and "worthless." It isn't that we believe he's a nefariously intentioned individual, it's just that the former Adweek word-stringer is astoundingly clueless. Is it the way he frequently, and publicly, struggles with basic reading comprehension? Or the way he acts like the most insipid observations are astounding revelations? Or is the way that his first-draft sentences flow as gracelessly as phlegm—and he never bothers to clean up his writing? He seems like a nice guy. Too bad Bazooka Joe wrappers have more insight.

Thomas Friedman

Hyperconnected mustachioed soothsayer Tom F. has been writing the same god damn column for, hell, over a decade now, ever since it became clear that cab driving
and cloud computing could come together to form something long enough
to fill an 800-word hole on the New York Times op-ed page. We're
actually rather fond of him now, in the same way that you might grow
fond of an old dog that refuses to stop chasing its own tail until it
vomits. He should be fired at once.

Malcolm Gladwell

North America's leading dispenser of
business-uplifting semiscientific semijournalism hit a new "tipping
point" of his own this year, when basically everyone outside his
lucrative adopted habitat on the speaking circuit lost the ability to
take him seriously. Maybe it was his "dyslexia is good for you" argument,
maybe it was his tribal defense of Gladwell 2.0 fraudster Jonah Lehrer,
maybe it was that at last he had managed to contradict himself on
everything. Last seen openly arguing that "No" means "Yes," in the
service of settling a grudge.

Less important than: Tim Ferriss.

Chris Jones

Repeat Least Important Writer Chris Jones' year didn't quite
top his 2012, during which the Esquire scribe asked his wife to start fucking better and deleted his blog because an intern criticized his prose style, but it came close. In January, Jones challenged the world's "shithearts" to 10 rounds of boxing; of course, the great writerer refused to actually fight the people who accepted his
"standing offer." And when his Esquire piece on Zanesville failed
to receive a National Magazine Award nomination (the award would
eventually go to GQ's story on the same topic), Jones, who won two
National Magazine Awards before turning 40, blamed "politics" and "enemies."

Sarah Lacy

One
nice thing you can say about startup-spooning Sarah Lacy is that her
name really only comes up when it's time to talk about how wrong she is.
Unfortunately, that's been very often: union-bashing,
startup-slobbering, Twitter apologizing, and generally positioning
herself as the least authoritative loudmouth in Silicon Valley. The only
humane thing she did this year was hire some soon-to-be-unemployed friends, but she's still the sort of person who would pick a hyped app over her own child.

Less important than: a BART conductor.

Jasmine Lobe

"If the braces-wearing asthmatic
in Bunk 6 wanted to convince her fellow campers she had experienced quite a ton
of sex in loads of different fashions and such, what sorts of improbable,
anatomically incorrect fictions might she invent to support that point? PS
She's also schizophrenic." This is the question that official New York Observer sex columnist and serious
non-virgin Jasmine Lobe attempts to answer every few weeks or so, on a schedule
as regular as a highly irregular period, in her hallucinatory dream journal, "The J-Spot." At its inception this past fall, Lobe's column got off to a start
that was not as much shaky as violently, shudderingly convulsive—not unlike
the wild orgasm that erupts from a woman's bellybutton (?) when a man rubs his
butt on her butt (?). A rambling story about flying from LA to New York was
illustrated with a cartoon sex kitten rendering of the author perched sexily
atop a pile of sexy suitcases literally overflowing with thongs and bras (bras which
presumably would later cradle the swollen breasts that, in the drawing,
protrude from her neck like goiters). Also inserted alongside the text (apropos
of nothing): a real life photograph of Lobe sitting next to "Homeland star Claire Danes" at an event
sponsored by Grey Goose. No penetration occurred in that inaugural column,
though our bra-ful narrator did masturbate while fantasizing about a man
masturbating. With lines like, "He goes down on me while I grab his hair and
stroke his eyelashes," it's probably a blessing that she was not called upon to
describe the act of coitus. Most confusingly of all: Jasmine Lobe's story was
written in the first person from the point of view of a woman named "Julia"
and—briefly and out of nowhere—also in the third person. Things only got
worse from there.

Less important than: The least important person Candace Bushnell will
cheek-kiss today.

Farhad Manjoo

Somewhere around the time Manjoo crossed over from Slate's resident male makeup enthusiast to a tech columnist for the Wall Street Journal, his standard issue contrarianism turned downright dopey. Dry-erase boards are Silicon Valley's secret weapon, teleconferencing software can make meetings fun, and people like buying Apple products (and Neetzan is great at blogging), he declares with equal parts awe and obliviousness. But Manjoo's Twitter account is where his newfound naiveté
really shines. It reads like he's been huffing the fumes of a hundred
Business Insider slideshows and came out thinking Twitter is where you
fill out IT tickets. At this point, the sight of his stipple portrait in
your stream invites a visceral "What now with this yokel?"

Less important than: The fake Google bus guy.

Stephen Marche

When
you get your PhD in early modern drama, there's really only one thing
to do: Prove you're just one of the average joes with regular columns in
Esquire. Having
muddled along there, the magazine assigned Stephen Marche a cover profile of Megan Fox, elsewhere dubbed The Worst Thing Ever Written.
In it, he described the actress as a "sexual prop" and proudly
mansplained to her how she is like an Aztec sacrifice. At least he
appears to like her more than he likes his own wife, whose
idiosyncrasies he regularly serves up with warmed over SAT-word salad.

Less important than: Esquire's two-page Cialis ad insert.

Peggy Noonan

Breathy Reaganite Peggy Noonan lives in a country. America? Yes, that's the one. Peggy Noonan lives in this great nation, America, in the year 1896, which is why she is shocked by race-mixing and hotels and electricity and statistics. Peggy Noonan is one of the most incisive columnists of the 19th century.

Less important than: The Hon. Norman Jay Coleman, the Secretary of Agriculture under Grover Cleveland.

Kathleen Parker

Farcical Pulitzer Prize winner Kathleen Parker believes that racial profiling is "common sense" and that black people are riot-prone. If Kathleen Parker's own beliefs were true, she would have been tarred and feathered by a righteously angry mob long ago.

Less important than: An imaginary black best friend.

Jane Pratt

As a writer, xoJane editor/matriarch Jane Pratt has some
irritating quirks. She can be cheerily vacant ("I think our website was pretty great this week.").
She thinks posting what the site didn't write
about is interesting, so she does that every week. This often comes with a
re-explanation of why ("I am so very into showing you guys how
the behind-the-scenes stuff becomes front-of-the-scenes stuff (or should I just
say 'the scene?') and that's why I publish this list every
Saturday"), an explanation of how the sausage behind the sausage gets made. She
confirms that New York profile from
last year and acts
like a star-fucker, regularly dropping names—i.e., "I stayed with my friend Courteney while I was out there, which
also means we try to talk as much as possible and therefore sleep as little as
possible. (And there was no other reason to tell you that than for the
name-drop, not even well woven-in. I will do better next time, I promise. But
she is doing great.)"

But her worst offense is that she's
only those quirks – while encouraging her stable of writers and commenters (via open threads)
to bleed their feelings into content, she reveals virtually
nothing about herself. (Oh, except that she's only been asked six times to pose nude professionally.)
Hers is a cult of personality without her personality. A great gig if you can
finagle it.

Less important than: THE HATERS.

Rick Reilly

The millionaire sports opinion-haver put the emphasis on
family this year. He welcomed Colin Kaepernick to the Super Bowl with a
column demanding to know why the young quarterback hadn't tried to get
to know his biological parents, the way Reilly's own adopted daughter
had. He used his wife to do his reporting legwork for him via Twitter.
Then, perfectly combining his signature habits of glib bullshitting and
utter laziness, he declared that the name "Redskins" was OK (not
mentioning that this contradicted the position he'd loudly and idly
taken before on the issue) because his Native American father-in-law had
told him it was OK—apparently without checking the claim with his
father-in-law, who publicly disputed it. Who has time for reporting when
you're on TV?

Less important than: Ray Lewis

Andrew Sullivan

The
grumpy old man of turn-of-the-century warblogging, Andrew Sullivan
still has his fans. But having bounced his blog around from TIME to The Atlantic to the Daily Beast to
its current "paywall" site run by Sullivan himself, the declining
returns of his particular brand of preachy warmongering, apologies for
warmongering, jabbering about Catholicism and complaining about New York
City have been revealed. Just 30,880 people had subscribed to his Daily Dish as of November 1. Sullivan's "Mini-Me," Ross Douthat, put the nail in the coffin this summer when he named Sullivan "the most influential political writer of his generation."

Less important than: Ross Douthat.

Joe Weisenthal

Elizabeth Wurtzel

Career provocatrix Elizabeth Wurtzel desperately wants you to know she was Somebody. In the last year, the Prozac Nation author has shared, in any outlet that would allow her, many things about herself, including that she found herself in a Harvard University marketing brochure, listed among literary greats like T. S. Eliot, John Updike, and Henry David Thoreau. And that she almost definitely rode the pony baloney of Replacements' headcase Paul Westerberg, as well as married songwriter Rhett Miller. And that she is terribly disappointed in today's youth because "Lena Dunham with her inexcusable thighs" are one of "the only twentysomething success story in the world of high art and entertainment"—and this is important because when she was that age, she was wilder, crazier, more daring, and more romantically frenzied, which is what made her Somebody in the first place, so.

What Wurtzel doesn't want you to know is that the Internet has made smart brand of batshit narcissism mostly irrelevant. And that making fun of Lena Dunham's legs make her feel better about her own cruel quarrel with aging. And that now, at age 46, one of her publishers is Thought Catalog, which makes her a peer to Brianna Wiest. And that none of these things would be so bad if Wurtzel weren't so desperate to remind you how great she once was, rather than attempting to do new things that are actually great.

Less important than: Cat Marnell

Matthew Yglesias

Matthew
Yglesias is not so much a writer as a dada thought experiment: What if
Andy Rooney was a private-schooled trust-funder who was paid to
cross-post Yelp reviews on Slate and interpret Thomas Friedman for
D.C.-based millennials with bachelors' degrees?